Syrian Baath Party building 'hit by rockets'

Syrian Army defectors say they launched a rocket-propelled grenade attack on a
Baath Party building in Damascus on Sunday, in the first insurgent attack
inside the Syrian capital since the uprising began.

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Alleged dissident Syrian soldiers: The main ruling Baath Party in Damascus reportedly came under attack on Sunday by insurgents Photo: REUTERS

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An exterior view of the headquarter of the ruling Baath party in the al-Mazraa neighborhood in DamascusPhoto: EPA

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Protesters against President Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian town of Deir al-ZourPhoto: REUTERS

Witnesses reported hearing two explosions before seeing smoke rising and fire trucks rushing to the scene early this morning.

It is thought the attack was carried out just before dawn when the building was mostly empty. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Thabet Salem, a journalist who lives close the party building, told Al Jazeera: "This is a clear-cut escalation of what's going on ... It will bring us into a dangerous phase."

The Free Syrian Army is a rag-tag group of defectors who have taken up arms against state security forces. Last week they claimed responsibility for an attack on an air force intelligence base on the outskirts of Damascus.

Flying the face of the League's peace plan, a defiant President Bashar Assad said over the weekend he was prepared to fight and die for Syria if faced with foreign intervention, while calls for an end to the government crackdown seemed to have fallen on deaf ears, as violence overnight showed no sign of abating.

Among the dead from Saturday were four intelligence agents killed by gunmen who raked their car with gunfire, and two defecting soldiers who died in clashes with regular troops in the central town of Shayzar, human rights campaigners said.

With rebel troops inflicting mounting losses on the regular army, Turkey and the United States both raised the spectre of civil war and Russia called for restraint.

But in an interview with the Sunday Times, conducted before the Arab League deadline lapsed, President Assad said he was "definitely" prepared to fight and die for Syria if faced with foreign intervention.

"This goes without saying and is an absolute," he said.

The president said he felt sorrow for each drop of Syrian blood spilt but insisted Damascus must go after armed rebel gangs and enforce law and order.

"The conflict will continue and the pressure to subjugate Syria will continue," he said. "I assure you that Syria will not bow down and that it will continue to resist the pressure being imposed on it."

Mr Assad accused the Arab League of creating a pretext for Western military intervention, which he said would trigger an "earthquake" across the Middle East.

But after talks with Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow, French prime minister Francois Fillon said: "It is indispensable to increase international pressure.

"We have tabled a resolution at the United Nations. We hope it will find as wide support as possible."

Russia has staunchly resisted any attempt to invoke international involvement in the crisis, fearing it could clear the way for a Libya-style military campaign under a UN mandate.

"We are calling for restraint and caution. This is our position," Putin said a day after after his foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, had likened the situation in Syria to a civil war.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu both warned that the risk of civil war was real, and Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said he felt Assad had reached "a point of no return" with a change of regime possible within months.

Mrs Clinton told NBC news: "I think there could be a civil war with a very determined and well-armed and eventually well-financed opposition that is, if not directed by, certainly influenced by defectors from the army."

With the peace deal in tatters, the Arab League has already suspended Syria from the 22-member bloc and saw its deadline expire on Saturday with no compliance from President Assad's security forces.

That came after pro-Assad troops stormed the central town of Shayzar, according to the Local Coordination Committees, an opposition umbrella group.

The 57-nation Organisation of Islamic Cooperation said it would convene an emergency meeting next Saturday at its Saudi headquarters to urge Syria to "end the bloodshed".

The OIC "rejects foreign intervention in Syria", its chief Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu said, but he warned that further unrest threatened regional stability as well.